Serb official visits Moscow, calls sanctions EU ‘hysteria’
In a meeting with Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, the Serbian interior minister highlights Belgrade’s refusal to join Western sanctions against Russia.
Serbia’s interior minister met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow in a rare visit by a state official from Europe, highlighting Belgrade’s refusal to join Western sanctions against Russia over its war in Ukraine.
Interior Minister Aleksandar Vulin, who is known for his pro-Russia and anti-Western stance, said he told Lavrov during their meeting on Monday that “Serbia is the only state in Europe that didn’t introduce sanctions and was not part of the anti-Russian hysteria”.
Serbia, which formally seeks European Union membership, has for years been drifting away from its EU path and toward traditional Slavic ally Russia, as well as China.
Vulin is considered “Moscow’s man” within the Serbian government. He has been advocating the creation of a “Serbian World” that would unite all Serbs in the Balkans under one flag, led by Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic.
Vulin has said Serbia should abandon its EU membership goal and instead turn to Moscow, and he has often blasted Serbia’s neighbours and their leaders, calling them derogatory names.
Last year, Vulin had created a “working group” with Nikolai Patrushev, the powerful secretary of the Kremlin’s Security Council, to fight “colour revolutions” – a series of mass protests that sometimes led to the toppling of regimes in the former Soviet Union, the former Yugoslavia, the Middle East and Asia.
‘International principles violated’
Serbian independent media reported that at their meeting in Moscow late last year, Vulin handed to Patrushev wiretaps from a Belgrade meeting held by members of the Russian opposition.
It has been difficult for opposition groups to organise meetings in Russia, so they chose Belgrade as they do not need visas to enter Serbia.
Shortly afterwards, some of those who attended the meeting in Belgrade were arrested in Russia. Vulin has unconvincingly denied he handed over the tapes to Patrushev.
Serbian opposition officials have questioned the purpose of Vulin’s visit to Moscow as a new Serbian government is about to be formed – long awaited after the April general election.
Most say Vulin’s trip to Russia was organised by Moscow as a way to pressure Belgrade to include him in the new cabinet.
Lavrov had planned to visit Belgrade in June, but Serbia’s NATO-member neighbours have refused to allow his plane to fly over their territory.
Vulin said in a statement from Moscow on Monday that he “deeply regrets the fact that Minister Lavrov was prevented from visiting Belgrade in June by the will of other countries, pointing out that by banning Minister Lavrov’s official visit to Serbia, all principles of international law were violated”.